Gerald R. Ford Library

1000 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI48109-2114

www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov

U.S.
COUNCIL OF ECONOMIC ADVISERS

Records,
(1969) 1974-77

SUMMARY
DESCRIPTION

The
records, part of National Archives Record Group 459, consist of files
accumulated during the Ford administration by Chairman Alan Greenspan, members
Gary L. Seevers, William J. Fellner,
Paul W. MacAvoy, and Burton G. Malkiel,
and staff economists.The records
document the Council's interest in a wide range of domestic and international
economic policy topics, and include some files retained from the Nixon
administration.

QUANTITY

70.4
linear feet (ca. 140,800 pages)

DONOR

Council
of Economic Advisers (accession numbers 78-62, 79-1, and 83-4)

ACCESS

Open.Some items are temporarily restricted under
terms of the general restrictions of the National Archives, a copy of which is
available on request.The records are subject
to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552).

COPYRIGHT

Works
prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in
the public domain.The copyrights to
materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain
with them.

Prepared by Paul
Conway, September 1979

Revised by Paul Conway, May 1983;
William McNitt, February 1995

[s:\bin\findaid\u.s.
council of economic advisers - records.doc]

BIOGRAPHICAL
INFORMATION

Alan Greenspan

Alan Greenspan
was appointed by President Nixon but was not confirmed by the Senate until September 10, 1974, succeeding Herbert Stein as chairman.He was educated at New YorkUniversity and was president
of Greenspan-Townsend and Company, Inc. of New York, an economic
consulting firm.Considered one of the
nation's foremost economic forecasters, he served as consultant to numerous
government organizations and private corporations and was active with the Nixon
for President Committee in 1968.In
January 1977, he returned to the presidency of his corporation.

Gary L. Seevers

Gary L. Seevers
became a member of the CEA on July 23, 1973, replacing Ezra Solomon, who had resigned in
March.Prior to his appointment he had
served the CEA as a senior
staff economist from 1970 to 1972 and as special assistant to Chairman Stein
from 1972 to 1973.He received his
education at MichiganStateUniversity and taught
agricultural economics for two years at OregonStateUniversity before joining
the Council.Seevers
remained a member until April 1975, when President Ford appointed him to the
newly created Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

William J. Fellner

William J. Fellner
became a Council member on October 31,
1973.He replaced Marina von Neuman Whitman, who had served since March 1972.While on the Council, he
was on leave from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he had been
resident scholar.Fellner was born in Budapest, Hungary, and educated
in European universities.His primary
professional interests included economic theory, forecasting and policy,
especially international economic reform.Fellner served until February 1975, when he
resigned to resume his work with the AEI.

Paul W. MacAvoy

Paul W. MacAvoy
became a member of the CEA on June 13, 1975, succeeding Gary Seevers.MacAvoy was
educated at YaleUniversity and taught
economics at the University of Chicago and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.During the Johnson administration, he served briefly as senior staff
economist on the Council and then served from 1969 to 1972 as a member of New York's Council of
Economic Advisers.Prior to his
appointment, MacAvoy had worked with the Energy
Policy Studies Group at the MIT Energy Laboratory and had published works on
regulatory reform.MacAvoy
served on the Council until November 1976, when he resigned to join the faculty
of YaleUniversity.

Burton G. Malkiel

Burton G. Malkiel
became a Council member on July 22, 1975, succeeding
William Fellner.Educated at Harvard and Princeton, he joined the
latter's faculty upon graduation.As a
specialist in monetary economics, theories of capital markets and corporate
finance, Malkiel directed Princeton's FinancialResearchCenter.He served on the Council to the end of the
Ford administration, thereafter joining the American Enterprise Institute.The Council of Economic Advisers, established
within the Executive Office of the President by the Employment Act of 1946,
provided economic analysis and advice to the President and assisted him in
developing and evaluating economic policies.The CEA consisted of a
chairman and two members appointed by the President with the advice and consent
of the Senate, and a supporting staff of economists, consultants and
assistants.They prepared regular
reports on current economic conditions, forecasted future economic developments
and submitted recommendations for consideration in the formation of economic
policy.CEA statistics and
analyses on the performance of the nation's economy were published in the
annual "Economic Report of the President", which also included the
"Annual Report of the CEA." The
Council also prepared the monthly publication "Economic Indicators."
In carrying out its duties, the Ford CEA worked closely
with federal agencies and departments, often participating in inter-agency
groups.

INTRODUCTION

The Council of Economic Advisers,
established within the Executive Office of the President by the Employment Act
of 1946, provided economic analysis and advice to the President and assisted
him in developing and evaluating economic policies.The CEA consisted of a
chairman and two members appointed by the President, with the advice and
consent of the Senate and a supporting cast of economists, consultants, and
assistants.They prepared regular
reports on current economic conditions, forecasted future economic
developments, and submitted recommendations for consideration in the formation
of economic policy.CEA statistics and
analyses on the performance of the nation's economy were published in the
annual Economic Report of the President, which also included the
"Annual Report of the CEA."The Council also prepared the monthly
publication Economic Indicators.In carrying out its duties, the Ford CEA worked closely
with federal agencies and departments, often participating in interagency
groups.

The Role of the
Ford CEA

Since its creation, the
effectiveness of the CEA in shaping
national economic policy has varied depending on the needs of the President and
his relationship with the chairman.During the Ford administration, the Council played an active and direct
advisory role.Chairman Alan Greenspan
served as one of President Ford's chief advisers on domestic and international
economic policy.He was a member of the
Executive Committee of both the Economic Policy Board (EPB) and the Energy
Resources Council.He headed the US delegation to
the Economic Policy Committee of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) and served as vice-chairman of that committee.He also participated in a series of
"Troika" working groups, comprised of representatives of the CEA, the Treasury
and the Office of Management and Budget, which evaluated economic performance
and formulated detailed economic forecasts.Greenspan was aided by special assistant John Davis.

Council members coordinated their
work with the chairman, assumed special subject area responsibilities, and
supervised the work of the staff.Gary
L. Seevers,
succeeded in 1975 by Paul W. MacAvoy, assumed
responsibility for the following areas:

- energy
and natural resources

- commodity
trade issues

- food and
agriculture

- environmental
problems

- urban and
national growth policy

- transportation

- regulatory
reform

- antitrust

- health,
education and welfare (MacAvoy, 1976 only)

Seevers
and MacAvoy served as chairmen of the EPB's Food Deputies Group, and MacAvoy
was co-chairman of the Domestic Council group on regulatory reform.

William J. Fellner, succeeded in 1975
by Burton G. Malkiel, assumed responsibility for the
following areas:

- business
conditions analysis

- short-term
forecasting

- monetary
and fiscal policy

- international
trade and finance

- manpower
employment and labor market development

- financial
markets

- housing

- taxation
and social security

- health,
education and welfare

Malkiel
was chairman of a "Troika" sub-group and of the EPB Subcommittee on
Economic Statistics, and served on the Economic Policy Committee of the OECD.

Senior and junior staff economists
and statisticians supported the Council by conducting much of the basic
research.Staff economists worked
closely with a particular Council member and were responsible for research and
reporting in specific subject areas.Staff members and their responsibilities were listed each year in the CEA's Annual Report.

The CEA Records

These records consist of files
accumulated by President Ford's Council members and staff, and include some
materials pre-dating his administration.The records are arranged under the name of the CEA member who
accumulated them, with staff files placed at the end of the collection.Various materials originated by one CEA member may
appear in the files of his successor.

The collection is a rich resource,
documenting the direct involvement of the CEA in economic
policymaking; contacts with business leaders, lobbyists, and economists from universities,
federal agencies, and international organizations; the work of interagency
groups; and the Council's detailed research on micro and macro economic policy
issues.The records document CEA analysis and
policy recommendations in such areas as agricultural and food policy, housing
construction, environmental and energy policies, supplies of strategic
materials, exploitation of ocean resources, management of timber resources,
transportation problems and policies, functioning of the labor market and
problems of the unemployed, proposals for health insurance and income
maintenance, and needed improvements in government economic statistics.

Prior to the Ford administration,
records generated by the chairman and members were considered personal papers
to be disposed of as they chose.In
March 1977, the National Archives accessioned the Council files as federal
records and deposited them in the Gerald R. Ford Library.Portions of files of declined invitations and
unanswered correspondence were appraised and disposed of as valueless.The Library received a large accretion of
records of junior and senior staff economists in 1982.

Related
Materials (February 1995):

Extensive additional material
concerning economic policy during the Ford administration may be found in
various Library collections, particularly those ofAssistant to the President for
Economic Affairs L. William Seidman, Federal Reserve
Board Chairman Arthur Burns, and Secretary of the Treasury William Simon.The papers of Paul W. McCracken, a CEA member during
the Eisenhower administration and chairman for a portion of the Nixon
administration, Gardner Ackley, a member and chairman during the Kennedy and
Johnson administrations, and Warren L. Smith, a member during the Johnson
administration, have been deposited in the Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan.

Two sequences of material: 1) Chronologically-arranged
memoranda and drafts from Greenspan alone or jointly with CEA members to the
President on fluctuations of key economic indicators, including the Consumer
Price Index, housing starts and international monetary and financial conditions.2) Alphabetically-arranged material exchanged
between Greenspan and senior White House officials on various economic policy
and administrative matters.

Reports, studies, and related memoranda
produced by federal agencies, departments, commissions and councils at the
request of the CEA or sent to
Greenspan for his information.Although
some concern the Council's work, most concern specific agency programs of
interest to the CEA.

Correspondence
from Congressmen, business leaders, economists and the general public offering
congratulations, thanks, or advice; requesting information, or extending
invitations to speak.Much
of it was forwarded for reply to Greenspan's special assistant, John
Davis.

Arranged by year
and thereunder alphabetically by correspondent.

37-56Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File,
1974-76.(8.3 linear feet)

Reports and related memoranda mainly prepared
for general distribution by White House officials, federal agencies or private
business firms and sent to Greenspan for information.The series contains information on the CEA's wide-ranging
interests and responsibilities, including energy policy, federal government
budgetary and regulatory activities and domestic economic conditions,
particularly the 1974 Conference in Inflation.Also documented are certain meetings between Greenspan and the President
or his advisers and drafts of the 1976 State of the Union address.

An incomplete
set of agenda and minutes of meetings of the EPB or its Executive Committee,
some with attached discussion papers or draft memoranda and reports.The documents summarize discussion and decisions
reached on a wide range of economic policy matters, including tax and
regulatory reform, measures to combat inflation and international financial
conditions.The series is most complete
from September 1974 to December 1975, but sparse thereafter.

Remarks,
statements or testimony by Greenspan with occasional supporting correspondence
and printed material.Most
were delivered before congressional committees, federal agencies or the press,
but some speeches before private groups are included.

Correspondence, agenda and itineraries,
selected remarks and other papers on Greenspan's appearances before privately
sponsored conferences and forums, but including some material from meetings
with government officials.

Arranged
chronologically.

63-70Gary L. Seevers
Files: Subject File, 19711975. (3.3
linear feet)

Primarily reports, but also correspondence,
memoranda and other material produced by Seevers or
received from federal agencies mainly documenting energy policy, including US
responses to the Arab oil embargo, Project Independence, and the planning and
administration of Phase III and Phase IV
price controls.Also included are
information on food and agriculture policy, statistical reliability, antitrust
and transportation, among other areas.Some material dates from Seevers' role as special
assistant to Chairman Stein.

Outgoing
correspondence, speech drafts, reports, and memoranda by Seevers
covering the full range of his responsibilities, particularly energy matters,
inflation, transportation and the supply and price of agricultural commodities.

Correspondence, memoranda and other papers
sent to Seevers for information from officials of
certain federal agencies, the White House and the CEA.Some materials, particularly from CEA staff
economists, concern Seevers' responsibilities for
energy policy, food, and domestic economic conditions among other areas.Other papers concern his administrative
responsibilities as special assistant to Chairman Stein and include reference
copies of Stein's own correspondence.Correspondence with additional federal agencies is located in Seevers' subject file.

Copies of memoranda to President Nixon,
primarily from Chairman Stein, and sent to Seevers
for information, informing the President of changes in national and
international financial conditions and the status of key economic indicators,
including the Consumer Price Index, employment, housing starts and food
supplies.Gaps occur in the periods August
1973 to January 1974 and March to May 1974.Similar memoranda sent to President Ford are located in the Greenspan
White House Correspondence series.

Correspondence, memoranda, agendas and other
papers on meetings in which Seevers took part,
including formal meetings of interagency groups, conferences with
representatives of congressional committees, discussions with private industry
representatives, and meeting with CEA members and
staff economists; also some regretted invitations.Some materials date from his service as
special assistant to Chairman Stein.

An incomplete accumulation of correspondence
and memoranda exchanged between Fellner and CEA staff
economists, federal officials and members of the academic community regarding
taxation, forecasting, energy and economic policy in general.

Material on Fellner's participation in meetings of the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development, International Monetary Fund, Bank for
International Settlements, and Japanese Economic Planning Agency, including
some papers originated by his predecessor, Marina Whitman; information on the
1974 Conference on Inflation; and biographical information and one article
written by Fellner.

Arranged
alphabetically.

86-98Paul W. MacAvoy
Files: Subject File, 1970-76.(5.1
linear feet)

Memoranda, reports, studies and other papers
sent to MacAvoy for information from federal agencies
and departments; also included are edited speeches, handwritten notes and some
correspondence.Topics include energy
matters, regulatory reform, agricultural problems, commodity policy and similar
economic policy subjects.Some material
on Troika forecasting and uranium enrichment was retained from the files of his
predecessor, Gary Seevers.

Correspondence and memoranda exchanged between
MacAvoy and the White House.Subject areas cover the full range of his
responsibilities and include comments on legislation, presidential speeches and
material from interagency meetings and conferences.Several items were retained from Gary Seevers' files.

Correspondence, memoranda, reports and other
papers accumulated by MacAvoy while participating in
various Executive Branch special committees, boards, task forces and
interagency groups, reflecting both the subject areas for which he was
responsible and his particular professional interests.Most prominently documented are economic
policy, regulatory reform, food and transportation matters and energy policy,
and his particular interests in the President's 1976 State of the Union address
and the series of White House regional conferences.Some material on food and energy was retained
from the files of Gary Seevers.

Correspondence,
invitations, notes, reports and other papers on MacAvoy's
official participation in Executive branch and non- governmental meetings and
conferences.Although most meetings
relate to his major areas of responsibility, particularly transportation,
regulatory reform and energy, occasional meetings with business executives,
educators and other private citizens are included.

Correspondence exchanged between MacAvoy and government officials, business executives and
the public on a variety of economic policy matters, but including reports and
articles sent to MacAvoy for comment, occasional
meeting invitations, requests for academic recommendations and similar
semi-personal correspondence.Arranged alphabetically by correspondent.

Correspondence exchanged between Malkiel and federal officials, business executives and
educators on a wide variety of economic policy matters and including
information on Malkiel's interest in forecasting,
particularly his activities with the Troika and the Economic Policy Board and
material on national and international economic conditions, business and labor
matters.Reports formerly attached to
correspondence in this series are in Malkiel's
subject file.

Correspondence received from business
executives, scholars, government officials and the public extending invitations
to speak at forums and conferences, thanking Malkiel
for his participation, asking him to comment on attached studies or commenting
on economic policy.Included are
occasional replies to incoming correspondence and memoranda to the Council or
federal officials on non-policy matters.

Arranged
chronologically.

122-137Burton G. Malkiel: Subject File, 1975-77.(6.7 linear feet)

Material
documenting Malkiel's broad areas of responsibility,
particularly monetary policy, international trade, employment and business
conditions and economic forecasting.His activities as representative on the Economic Policy Committee of the
OECD and as Chairman of the Subcommittee on Economic Statistics of the EPB are
well documented.Some material on the
latter group, accumulated by Gary Seevers, was
removed during processing and placed in Seevers' subject
file.

Arranged
alphabetically by subject.

138-142CEA Staff
Economists Files, 1973-75.(2.0 linear
feet)

Memoranda with attached reports, drafts,
charts and other papers authored by or sent for information to certain senior
and junior staff economists containing information on the individuals' specific
subject area responsibilities, including energy policy, price and general
economic analysis, food and agricultural policy and transportation, among other
areas.Papers prepared by other staff
economists and assistants and sent to Chairman Greenspan for information or
comment may be found in his series of internal CEA correspondence.

Arranged
alphabetically by staff member and thereunder
chronologically.A chart at the end of this
finding aid shows the length of tenure and areas of responsibility for the
various staff economists.

Memoranda, correspondence, reports, charts,
tables, and other material produced or accumulated by many of the Council's
staff economists on the full spectrum of economic issues of the Ford
administration.This late addition to
the collection was discovered in White House storage during the Carter
administration, accessioned by the National Archives in 1980, and sent to the
Ford Library in 1982.

The quantity and quality of material varies
tremendously among staff economists.Most prominently documented are such microeconomic issues as the supply
and use of energy, including environmental impacts, the reform of
transportation industry regulations, and unemployment rates and benefits; and
such macroeconomic issues as inflation rates, money supplies, tax revenues, and
international finance, including the work of the OECD Economic Policy
Committee.These staff files also
document the administration of the Council and the extent to which staff
economists maintained their ties with universities and research groups.

Arranged
alphabetically by staff economist and thereunder in
subject or chronological sequence.A
chart at the end of this finding aid shows the length of tenure and areas of
responsibility for the various staff economist

Container List

Box 1Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Memoranda for the
President, August 1974 - September 1975

Box 2Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Memoranda for
the President, October 1975 - October 1976

Armstrong, Anne

Cannon, James
(1)-(3)

Box 3Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Cannon, James
(4)-(8)

Cavanaugh, James

Cheney, Richard

Connor, James
(1)

Box 4Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Connor, James
(2)-(3)

Duval, Michael

Friedersdorf, Max

Jones, Jerry
(1)-(2)

Leppert, Charles

Nessen, Ron

Rumsfeld, Donald

Rustand, Warren

Box 5Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Schleede, Glenn

Seidman, William
(1)-(5)

Speech Writers
(1)

Box 6Alan Greenspan Files: White House
Correspondence

Speech Writers
(2)

Vice President

Walker, William

Warren, Jerry

White, Margita

Miscellaneous

Alan Greenspan Files: Federal
Agency Correspondence

Agriculture

Commerce -
General (1)-(2)

Commerce - Dent,
Frederick

Commerce - Jaszi, George

Congressional
Budget office

Box 7Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Council on
Environmental Quality

Council on
International Economic Policy - Eberle

Council on Wage
and Price Stability

Defense

Economic Policy
Board (1)-(4)

Box 8Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Economic Policy
Board (5)-(12)

Box 9Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Energy Research
and Development Administration

Environmental
Protection Agency

Federal Energy
Administrative (1)-(4)

Federal Power
Commission

Federal Reserve
Board - General (1)-(2)

Box 10Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Federal Reserve
Board - General (3)

Federal Reserve
Board - Burns, Arthur

General Services
Administration

Housing and
Urban Development

Interior
Department

Justice
Department

Labor - General (1)-(2)

Labor - Shiskin, Julius

National
Advisory Council

National
Commission on Supplies and Shortages

Box 11Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

National
Commission on Water Quality (1)-(6)

Box 12Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

National Productivity
Commission (1)-(2)

National
Security Council

Nuclear
Regulatory Commission

Office of
Management and Budget (1)-(4)

Box 13Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Office of
Management and Budget (5)-(6)

Office of
Management and Budget - Frey, James (1)-(2)

Office of
Management and Budget - Lynn, James

Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development

- General (1)

Box 14Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development

- General (2)-(3)

- Meeting, November 17-20, 1974

- Meeting, March 5-7, 1975 (1)-(2)

Securities and
Exchange Commission (1)-(2)

Box 15Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

State Department
(1)-(6)

Box 16Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Trade
Negotiations, Special Representative for

Transportation -
General

Transportation
- Brinegar, Claude S.

Transportation
- Coleman, William T.

Treasury -
General (1)-(4)

Box 17Alan Greenspan Files: Federal Agency
Correspondence

Treasury -
General (5)

Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Chiswick, Barry (1)-(4)

Box 18Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Chiswick, Barry (5)-(7)

Clark, Peter

Cooper, Doral

Crary, David

Darroch, J.D.

Davis, John
(1)-(2)

Fellner, William

Foss, Murray

Box 19Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Gardner, Bruce
(1)-(3)

Green, Jeff
(1)-(3)

Greenspan, Alan
- 1974

Greenspan, Alan
- 1975 (1)-(2)

Greenspan, Alan
- 1976

Box 20Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Junz, Helen (1)-(2)

Kvasnicka, John (1)-(2)

Laney, Leroy

MacAvoy, Paul (1)-(2)

Box 21Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

MacAvoy, Paul (3)-(8)

Malkiel, Burton (1)-(2)

Box 22Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Malkiel, Burton (3)

McCarthy,
Michael

McNicol, David (1)-(2)

Miller, James
(1)-(2)

Moser, James
(1)-(2)

Munro, David

Box 23Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

O'Neill, June
(1)-(2)

Peterson, Fred

Popkin, Joel

Pulsipher, Alan (1)-(2)

Quinn, Tim

Quintano, Rosemary

Russell, Milton (1)-(2)

Box 24Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Russell, Milton (3)-(4)

Sarris, Valerie

Scadding, John

Schuh, G. Edward
(1)-(3)

Seevers, Gary (1)

Box 25Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Seevers, Gary (2)-(4)

Siegfried, John

Smith, Barbara

Springer,
William

Stillman, Robert

Taylor, John

Van Duyne, Carl

Verleger, Philip (1)-(2)

Von Furstenberg,
George (1)

Box 26Alan Greenspan Files: Internal CEA Correspondence

Von Furstenberg,
George (2)-(7)

Watson, Harry

Wescott, Paul

Box 27Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1974 A-M(1)

Box 28Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1974 M(2)-N

Box 29Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1974 O-Z

Box 30Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1975 A-D

Box 31Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1975 E-H(2)

Box 32Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1975 H(3)-L

Box 33Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1975 M-R

Box 34Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1975 S-Z

Box 35Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1976 A-K

Box 36Alan Greenspan Files: General
Correspondence

1976 L-Z

Box 37Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Airline
Regulatory Reform Legislation

Aluminum Prices,
Draft Report of Council on Wage and Price Stability (1)-(2)

Aviation Noise

Budget, F.Y.
1976 (1)-(2)

Budget, F.Y.
1977

Bureau of
Economic Analysis Model

Box 38Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Common Situs Picketing

Coal Industry

Council of
Economic Advisers - Annual Report 1975-76

Econometric
Forecasting

Economic/Energy
Meetings (1)-(3)

Box 39Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Economic/Energy
Meetings (4)-(5)

Economic Summit (Puerto Rico) June 1976
(1)-(4)

Box 40Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Economic Summit (Puerto Rico) June 1976
(5)-(8)

Energy

- General (1)-(2)

Box 41Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Energy

- General (3)

- Energy Resources Council (1)-(5)

Box 42Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Energy

- Energy Resources Council (6)-(11)

Box 43Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Energy

- Energy Resources Council (12)-(15)

- Energy Resources Council - Camp David Meeting, June 6, 1975 (1)-(2)

- Energy Resources Council - Northern Tier
Report (1)

Box 44Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Energy

- Energy Resources Council - Northern Tier
Report (2)-(3)

- Energy Resources Financial Corporation
(1)-(3)

- Legislation (1)-(2)

Flow of Funds
Projection

Box 45Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Food (1)-(3)

Food Stamps
(1)-(2)

General Revenue
Sharing

Government
Statistics, Release of

GNP Data
Improvement (1)-(2)

Box 46Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

GNP Data
Improvement (3)

Health Insurance

Housing (1)-(2)

House Budget
Committee

Humphrey - Javits Bill (S. 1795)

International
Economic Policy Issues

International
Economic Summit (Paris) - November 15-17, 1975 (1)-(2)

Box 47Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

International
Economic Summit (Paris) - November 15-17, 1975 (3)-(6)

Legislation - CEA Comments,
(1)-(3)

Box 48Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Lockheed
Aircraft

Murphy Report
(Commission of the Organization of the Government for the Conduct of Foreign
Policy) (1)-(2)

Nuclear Fuels
Industry

Nuclear Policy
Review

Oil Decontrol
(1)-(3)

Box 49Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Oil Decontrol
(4)

Population
Growth (1)-(2)

President
Ford/Senior Economic Advisers Meetings, 1974 (1)-(2)

Presidential
Speeches, Addresses and Interviews on the Economy, 1974

President's
Address to Congress - 10/8/74 (WIN)

Box 50Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

President's
Panel on Federal Compensation (1)-(2)

Project Independence (1)-(3)

Publications
Received

Rail Legislation

Rail
Restructuring, Northeast

Box 51Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Regulatory Reform
(1)-(2)

Soviet Grain
Purchases

State of the Union - 1976 (1)-(4)

Box 52Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

State of the Union - 1976 (5)

Sugar Policy
Review

Summit
Conference on Inflation - September 1974

- General

- Economists, September 5, 1974 (1)-(3)

- Labor, September 11, 1974 (1)

Box 53Alan Greenspan Files: Subject File

Summit
Conference on Inflation - September 1974

- Labor, September 11, 1974 (2)

- Housing and Construction, September 12, 1974 (1)-(2)

- Agriculture and Food, September 13, 1974

- Natural Resources and Recreation, September 16, 1974

- Business and Manufacturing, September 16, 1974

- Business and Manufacturing, September 19, 1974

- Health, Education, Income Security and
Social Services, September 19,
1974